Hello everyone!
I have had this laptop for a long time, about 1-2 years now and I was wondering to switch the GTX 960M to a GTX 980M although I am not sure if this swap is possible. Could anyone enlighten me i this is possible?
These are my current specs:
Laptop: Lenovo Y50(-Y70 series)
CPU: Intel i7-4720HQ [email protected] GHz
Memory: 16GB RAM
Resolution: 1920x1080, 60GHz
Driver version: 365.19
GTX 960M
OS: Microsoft Windows 10 Home
If possible, should I also remove my HDD (1TB) and switch to a SSD? I feel that perhaps an SSD could work better. I also game alot, right now I have DOOM (2016), Black Ops 3, GTA V, Bioshock Infinite, Modern Warfare 3, The Division and other games.
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Nope, as long as i know both CPU and GPU (960M) are soldered to the mainboard.
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860M (maxwell) and 960M cards are *ALWAYS* BGA. You will never change them.
Kent T likes this. -
this is what you get for not researching hard enough.
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D2 Ultima and killkenny1 like this.
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Unfortunately, no. Most laptops, even gaming ones, have all the chips soldered on the motherboard. The 970M on my Asus G751 is soldered on, too.
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King of Interns Simply a laptop enthusiast
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King of Interns Simply a laptop enthusiast
Google Alienware M15x. Fully upgradeable mxm 3.0B graphics and socketed nehalem based cpu. Started out with GTX 260M in 2009 and now it rocks 980M.
In between it has rocked in this order; 6970M, 6990M, 7970M, 680M and now 980M.
What is more I never killed a single card. Always sold them on and put the earnings toward the new card.
BGA is trash! Or at least ends up in the trash fast!
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I know what the laptop IS, I wanted current pics of your laptop
. M17x R2 era with 5870 Mobility XFIRE.
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TomJGX likes this.
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Ionising_Radiation ?v = ve*ln(m0/m1)
I'm of the opinion that yes, it is regrettable that BGA components cannot be upgraded, but a well-maintained, properly-soldered laptop (i.e. those from Clevo) would not die as easily.
The BGA hate here is sometimes too strong and too irrational. -
He's saying that a BGA machine will end up in the trash quicker than a upgradable machine. Which is 100% true. Look at his 7 year old m15x still going hard. I know where it'd be if it were sporting the original GPU were it welded down.
I know I'm preaching to the choir, but the destain for BGA is well deserved and not without reason. They are by definition 'disposable'.kosti likes this. -
Yeah BGA hate is for a reason. These machines have been made intentionally disposable to force everyone to upgrade the entire machine rather than keeping a machine for years and just upgrading the video cards.
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What about USB3/TB upgrades? What about pcie? What about a hidpi panel? Better trackpad? There's more to it than just upgrading the gpu
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Ionising_Radiation ?v = ve*ln(m0/m1)
Fair enough, BGA is 'disposable' by nature, but that doesn't mean we need to dismiss laptops that have BGA components as useless (like a certain few people who own P870DMs, ahem). Such laptops are perfectly capable in their own right, and a decent mid-range to high-end laptop GPU, if one is willing to sacrifice some graphics fidelity, can last half a decade.
I'd expect a GTX 970M to last easily a year more, at least, and the cards in the P6xx series are renowned to be excellent overclockers. I think I saw someone at the P650SE thread with a +500 MHz OC on a GTX 970M, effectively edging out a GTX 980M at stock. The laptops themselves are well-cooled, have Prema Mod and so on.
It's a fault of the industry that has been leaning towards the thin-and-light with the arrival of the MacBook Air in 2008, and then the iPad. It was Intel's fault in abandoning rPGA (I and those owning W230SDs probably have the last batch of rPGA motherboards ever manufactured), while GPUs on notebooks have rarely been MXM except on the very high-end. Hell, Intel Iris on Skylake has gotten so good (or at least, good enough for Apple) that the lower-end 15" MacBook Pro, which used to have a discrete GPU in it, now has Intel Iris Pro.
We consumers can't do nuts, and ostracising other consumers who don't need as much power as that in a P870DM but have no choice but to buy those 'BGA jokebooks/crapbooks/turdbooks' is pointless, and raving for a needless civil war.
And yet I want a 13-14" MXM laptop. -
King of Interns Simply a laptop enthusiast
The OP claims to game alot with numerous triple A titles that simply wont play well with a 960M.
BGA has its place but not in a so called "gaming" laptop. It is a lie to comsumers.
Some bga machines sport high end parts most dont. Still 970M soldered will become obselete in the next 2 years.
As for the comment regarding those OCing their bga 970Ms by +500mhz all they are doing is hastening their laptops way to the rubbish bin. Cant imagine many will still live a year from now.
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If you're overclocking your 970m by 400 to 500MHz without any significant voltage applied and temps are reasonable there's no reason to think they'll fail much sooner than if they weren't OC'd.
I'm not defending BGA, just that they exist in a majority of laptops now and if you know what you're buying, and opt for higher end up front chances are it will last you a while. Heck after 2-3 years any laptops I've had that have even been used moderately, something inevitably fails, like keyboard, USB ports (requiring new motherboard), flaky storage connections, or even LCD, etc.Ionising_Radiation likes this. -
killkenny1 Too weird to live, too rare to die.
My 7 year old M60J still looks as if new, and functions well (knocks on wood). -
saturnotaku Notebook Nobel Laureate
Most anyone who wants an upgradeable computer is going to buy a desktop. The market for people who want such possibilities for a notebook is a niche of a niche.
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saturnotaku Notebook Nobel Laureate
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The stuff I use always still looks like new after years of use. I always use a laptop sleeve though. THe onyl trace of usage is always on the spacebar which loses its texture after daily use.
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killkenny1 Too weird to live, too rare to die.
A friend of mine, he bought a laptop a half of year ago. The screen is busted, keyboard is missing few buttons, touchpad doesn't function... How one accomplishes such monstrosity is beyond me... -
King of Interns Simply a laptop enthusiast
People say a desktop costs a lot less while I beg to differ. A decent screen, keyboard and mouse will cost a fair bit and a computer desk another good chunk. No a gaming laptop IMHO is cheaper!TBoneSan likes this. -
I like to simplify it. Midranged machines being soldered? Regrettable, however manage-able.
High end, top end, and enthusiast machines being soldered? Then you're reaching stupid heights. If there's no arguement for a $500 CPU and one to two $400-$700 GPUs being soldered in desktop world, then there certainly is none in laptop world. But machines like the Aorus exist. Machines like the GT80 with soldered CPUs exist. EVGA's 6820HK that can't even handle 3.8GHz without hitting 90C in an A/C room running AIDA64 is a joke, and a 4K screen without Gsync with a soldered 980M is another kind of joke. They're passed off as high end or enthusiast machines for some really weird reason and nobody seems to tell them off.
I understand that it's not so much on the onus of the OEMs or even ODMs and the only reason Clevo is doing different is because they always have so the knowledge for them is second nature, however OEMs should work some more. The half-baked machines they're so keen on selling us for outrageous prices needs to stop, and I wish people would really stop defending them.TBoneSan and King of Interns like this. -
King of Interns Simply a laptop enthusiast
Damn straight D2!
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Soldered CPUs are an unfortunate happenstance, but soldered GPUs are on another level. CPUs outlast GPUs lately, when it comes to gaming. My old GX660R with 920xm and 5870m can still sport a 970m and be perfectly fine gaming. So soldered CPUs are a bit less of a hassle than soldered GPUs, even if both are undesirable. -
And their "automatic GPU overclock" is only 76MHz on core, mind. SEVENTY-SIX MEGAHERTZ. ON MAXWELL. I could probably undervolt my 780M and add 76MHz and have it be stable. -
I am already near the process to begin modding my CPU, but my temps are not nearly as bad in that regard. Reminds me of my work lenovo with it's 4800mq processor, that only runs at 3-3.1ghz because this piece of hardware can't run higher due to terrible temps. -
Good luck. As for that work lenovo throttling... ugh. I won't take a laptop that throttles at stock. Throttling beyond stock due to heat is something I can't say too much about considering where I live, but even so... it should work at stock. -
And yeah I have modded vbios.D2 Ultima likes this. -
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While they both can do the same things, they really are like apples and oranges. They do things so differently that the first question anyone needs to ask is, do you want the portability or not, and do you have the space for a desktop setup. -
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But still, we deserve more for our money in the laptop spectrum. Top end vs top end is different than midranged vs midranged. -
I game all the time, hours upon too many hours on my "BGA trash thin and light it'll die after 8 months because it's too hot" Blade. 2 years and still going strong.
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killkenny1 Too weird to live, too rare to die.
Wow, this thread has seriously derailed.
It's too tempting not to participate though
Sounds reasonable!
$200-300 is still a hefty sum when on budget, considering that a lot of people already stretch their budgets as much as they can, and even then still usually go overboard.
It's also worth mentioning that people who buy $700 desktops don't usually buy very expensive peripherals. And what about laptops? Sure, they have touchpads and speakers, but don't you need a decent pair of headphones/speakers/mouse/mousepad/etc. too?
But obviously what in this case is matters is what one wants from his/her rig. Mobility at the cost of performance and upgradability - BGA laptop. Performance at a cheaper price and good upgradability, but (almost) no mobility - desktop. Something in between, but at a higher cost - MXM laptop.
Choices are out there, and that's good. -
Laptops cost too much. Their parts are inferior to desktop parts, more locked down, generally worse-cooled and cost more. It's a fact. One I wish would just CHANGE already. But nope. I just wanted to make it clear that a full desktop + a full laptop aren't $700-$1000 apart in price for half the performance like people do say.tgipier likes this. -
killkenny1 Too weird to live, too rare to die.
TomJGX likes this. -
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killkenny1 Too weird to live, too rare to die.
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You gotta consider everything the laptop has that's extra from a barebones desktop build or you're not comparing it right. I know you can't buy the laptop WITHOUT those things, however they are being paid for when you do buy... whether you use them or not. The more correct statement if choosing to ignore all that is simply that you have more choice of components in a desktop, I suppose. -
Can we please get this thread back on topic? Right after my contribution
I won't speak for others, but for me the BGA "hate" isn't that I don't appreciate a thin and light design, it's just that the more trendy it becomes, the more they make those and the less they make my beloved non-BGA laptops. This goes round and round and even though I can understand the thin and light craze, that doesn't mean I want it to replace my choice of having a non-BGA laptop.
Basically we are down to one full non-BGA "choice" now do to Intel not making mobile socketed chops anymore, and desktop CPUs are next. This could be the last gen of fully up-gradable/replaceable/serviceable laptops and that is a sad though no matter who you are. Less choice is bad in this case IMO. -
killkenny1 Too weird to live, too rare to die.
If we continue price comparison on my example, a laptop with 980m would be even more expensive (at the time of the purchase of my PC 980m rigs were well in 2k EUR zone) and a rig with 960 would be around 150EUR cheaper. And even if you add 100EUR for missing peripherals (mouse, headphones/speakers/webcam, wi-fi/monitor/keyboard I already included), desktop financially and performance wise would make more sense, unless you need portability, though some gaming laptops aren't exactly that portable as well.
I will agree that "as you go higher end in laptop spectrum it gets worse value/dollar" though.
@Porter, sorry posted after I saw your message.
Is it possible to replace the lenovo Y50's GTX 960M to a GTX 980M?
Discussion in 'Gaming (Software and Graphics Cards)' started by Ratchet YT, May 15, 2016.